Heironimus vs. Heironimus (PDF)




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Heironimus vs. Heironimus: His 43 Story-Changes
Roger Knights

/ 1/10/12

/

12,130

Words

Contents (major items are highlighted)
1. Contents (major items are highlighted)..................................................................... 1
2. Introduction ............................................................................................................... 3
3. Discussion ................................................................................................................. 3
4. Preview of Major Changes (Spoiler Alert!) .............................................................. 4
5. Yakima Contradictions ............................................................................................. 6
6. When was BH first approached about suit wearing? ................................................ 6
7. Was BH concerned about possible illegality? .......................................................... 7
8. Did BH agree to wear the suit before, or while at, Tampico? .................................. 7
9. How many meetings were there at Tampico? ........................................................... 7
10. How many suit try-ons were there? .......................................................................... 7
11. What day did P&G leave?......................................................................................... 9
12. How many days later did BH depart? ....................................................................... 9
13. Where was the rendezvous to be? ............................................................................. 9
14. How long was BH away from Yakima? ................................................................. 10
15. Was BH’s employer on strike during the filming? ................................................. 10
16. Did BH ever see Patterson after the filming? ......................................................... 11
17. Bluff Creek Contradictions ..................................................................................... 12
18. What was the mileage from the meet-up to Bluff Creek Road? ............................. 12
19. And from there how many miles to the campsite? ................................................. 12
20. Was the filmsite right by the roadside?................................................................... 13
21. Who put the film in the mailing envelope? ............................................................. 14
22. Who put the suit in the trunk? ................................................................................. 14
23. What were Patterson’s track-stompers made of? .................................................... 15
24. Was a next-day film-announcement planned? ........................................................ 15
25. Did a next-day film-announcement occur? ............................................................. 16
26. Did BH sleep overnight in Eureka? ........................................................................ 18
1

27. Confidentiality & Confession-Related Contradictions ........................................... 19
28. Did BH promise Patterson absolute secrecy? ......................................................... 19
29. Did BH go to the Idle Hour bar? ............................................................................. 20
30. Did he implicitly “reveal” the hoax to his buddies? ............................................... 20
31. Did he explicitly “tell” anyone there about the hoax? ............................................ 20
32. How soon did BH’s buddies realize the suit’s purpose?......................................... 22
33. Did his mom, Opal, ask BH about the suit? ............................................................ 23
34. Who leaked the news about the suit? ...................................................................... 23
35. If asked, “Was it you in the suit?”, when did BH first say “Yes”? ......................... 24
36. Did BH talk to the media prior to seeing World’s Greatest Hoaxes in 1999?........ 25
37. Did BH “come forward” with money in mind? ...................................................... 26
38. Does BH have scruples now about hoaxing film-viewers? .................................... 27
39. Is BH willing to take another lie detector test? ....................................................... 28
40. Suit-Related Contradictions .................................................................................... 28
41. Was it easy to walk in the costume? ....................................................................... 29
42. What extra material was glued onto the suit? ......................................................... 29
43. How big was the gap behind the eye-holes? ........................................................... 30
44. How high were the boots inside the suit? ............................................................... 30
45. Were the Bigfoot’s feet made of slippers? .............................................................. 31
46. Was BH barefoot or shod inside the rubber boots? ................................................ 31
47. Was there padding in the suit? ................................................................................ 32
48. Were there any metal parts in the suit? ................................................................... 33
49. Was the suit split around the waist or up the back? ................................................ 33
50. Was the suit removed from the trunk by BH’s relatives? ....................................... 34
51. Was Patterson’s suit-retrieval in Yakima surreptitious or not? .............................. 36
52. Blundering Bob’s Bodacious Bloopers: A Summary ............................................. 39

2

Introduction
Greg Long — ― He [Bob Heironimus] has never changed his
story. ‖
— ― I nterviews Provided to Rense.com with Greg Long,
Michaela Kocis and Kal Korff, ‖ at
http://.www.rense.com/RenseInterviews.html.)
Rob McConnell — ― You have never altered your story.‖
Bob Heironimus — ― N o reason to alter it. The truth‘s
the truth. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
If Long & McConnell had been thinking critically they‘d have
noticed many story-alterations. Where the story has been told in
broadcast interviews, even more changes will be apparent to a
person who has transcripts to review and compare. To do that, I
transcribed the interviews from the audio. (The full transcripts
are posted elsewhere on this site so you can look them over
yourself.)
I list 43 story-changes here. Most are my own ― finds, ‖ but many
were first posted by others on Bigfootforums.com (BFF). (I refer
to the original version of the site, which has been lost due to
hacking.) Within each story-change item (except #35), quotes are
listed chronologically.
I‘ve highlighted the heading lines of the 25 major items — 58% of
the total. I‘ve omitted a few additional items, either because
they were trivial or because I didn‘t have enough detail to be
sure they were real changes.

Discussion
The judicial system considers story changes to be suspicious.
That‘s because an alibi that has no roots in reality is more
likely to show significant variations, and more of them, than a
true account. A person with a phony alibi is less likely to flesh
out its bare bones consistently, especially when long gaps
intervene. If his tale were rooted in reality, he wouldn‘t ― lose
the plot ‖ very often, or very badly. Therefore, as is well
known, police departments make a practice of repeatedly
questioning a suspect to see if such variations emerge.
In defense of BH it could be said that it‘s unnatural if a story
is rigidly unchanging. If there were no variations, it would be
― t oo pat. ‖ Further, in recollecting a complex, long-ago event,
a few story variations and additions are only to be expected
because, for instance:

3

1 As recent research has established, memory is not merely
― r etrieved ‖ ; rather, it is partially ― reconstructed ‖ — so
it won‘t be reconstructed the same way each time.
1 Over time, some people clear their memories of minor points.
2 Some people figure it‘s a kindness not to bore their
audience or themselves by telling the same exact account
every time, or by inflicting every trivial detail on them.
But BH‘s story-changes are numerous. Even seven changes would be
incriminating: he‘s rung up six times more. BH has done himself
proud.
In defense of BH it could be said that many of those changes are
either minor or debatable — the latter being items where there‘s
room for interpretation, also known as ― wiggle room. ‖
But it won‘t do to say that the ― minor ‖ items don‘t count. They
do count — at a minimum, they exhaust BH‘s quota of forgivable
flubs. They should still give ― partial debits ‖ to BH. And even
if you did find an interpretation to explain the debatable items
away — or pretended to yourself that you had — you‘d still have the
25 major ones left, and they weigh against the likelihood of the
minor changes being innocent. It‘s been said, ― Quantity has a
quality all its own. ‖ In other words, the quantity of BH‘s
improvisations, retouches, and missteps has the quality of
baloney. So, when viewed as a whole, BH‘s account rings false —
and therefore it doesn‘t deserve the benefit of the doubt in
debatable cases. The likelihood is that they‘re ― o f a piece ‖
with the rest of his yarn.
In defense of BH it could be said that he suffers from memory
loss. The event occurred a long time ago, and he‘s a senior
citizen.
But this isn‘t a long-forgotten or minor event that he‘s suddenly
been asked to dredge up from his memory banks. It was a key event
in his life, as he realized at the time. He‘s kept turning it
over in his mind whenever he brooded over being cheated out of
the $1000 that was promised him. And he regularly had his memory
of the event stimulated by having to field inquiries as to
whether he was the man in the suit.
Further, BH has undercut any bad-memory defense by heatedly
denying to Long that his memory was playing tricks on him (Long,
p. 416) and by not being too proud to admit ignorance: ― When I
asked him a question he couldn‘t answer, he simply said, ‗I don‘t
know that,‘ or ‗I don‘t remember.‘‖ (Long, p. 341) He doesn‘t
sound like he‘s ― a ll at sea. ‖

Preview of Major Changes (Spoiler Alert!)

4

Because 25 items were particularly suspicious, I graded them as
― m ajor. ‖ I consider it suspicious if a story-change:
A. Is extreme, even if it affects only a minor aspect of the
tale. In these cases the new version is starkly different from
the old one:
20

Was the filmsite right alongside the
road?
Did BH sleep overnight in Eureka?

22

Did BH go to the Idle Hour bar?

33

Was it easy to walk in the costume?

14

YES

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

NO

YES

YES

YES

YES

NO

B. Affects a clear-cut situation (about which an honest mistake
is hard to imagine), e.g.:
36
37
38

How big was the gap behind the eyeholes?
How high were the boots inside the
suit?
Was BH barefoot or shod in those
boots?

39

Was there padding or a harness in the
suit?

40

Were there any metal parts in the
suit?

2‖

1.5 ‖

1‖

Waist

Knee

Hip

Barefoo
t
NEITHER
(implic
it)
NO

.25–
.5 ‖

Shod
BOTH
(padding &
strap)
YES (a heavy car-top
zipper)

NO Belt

(This clear-cutness also applies, a bit less strongly, to the remaining
items.)

C. ― P atches up ‖ the story to account for new evidence or new
witnesses — especially when the prior (phony) version made the
claimant ― look good ‖ (as in the first five items below),
e.g.:

24

Was BH‘s employer on strike while
filming?
Did he ― reveal ‖ the hoax to his
buddies?
Did he ― tell ‖ any buddy about the
hoax?

27

Who leaked the news about the suit?

29

Did he talk to the media before
1999?
What extra material was glued onto
the suit?
Where was the suit split?

10
23

34
41

YES

NO

(per Long)

( ― lost a week‘s
pay ‖ )

NO

No Memory

YES

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

mom &
aunt

buddies

NO

YES

Fur Coat Horsehid
e
Around the waist

Up the back

D. ― I mproves ‖ the story by removing an implausible element:
18
19
43

Was a next-day film-announcement
planned?
Did a next-day film-announcement
occur?
Was Patterson‘s Yakima suitretrieval seen?

E. Polishes the raconteur‘s image:
5

NO

YES

NO

NO

NO

YES

YES

2
21
30
31

Was BH concerned about possible
illegality?
Did BH promise Patterson absolute
secrecy?
Did BH come forward with money in
mind?
Does BH have scruples now about
hoaxing?

NO

YES

YES

NO

YES

NO

NO

YES

YES

NO

NO

MAYBE

F. Is evasive:
32
42

Is BH willing to take another lie
detector test?
Did his relatives remove the suit
from trunk?

YES

*************

Yakima Contradictions
Contents
1. When was BH first approached about suit wearing? ........................................... 6
2. Was BH concerned about possible illegality? ..................................................... 7
3. Did BH agree to wear the suit before, or while at, Tampico? ............................. 7
4. How many meetings were there at Tampico? ...................................................... 7
5. How many suit try-ons were there? ..................................................................... 7
6. What day did P&G leave?.................................................................................... 9
7. How many days later did BH depart? .................................................................. 9
8. Where was the rendezvous to be? ........................................................................ 9
9. How long was BH away from Yakima? ............................................................ 10
10. Was BH’s employer on strike during the filming? .......................................... 10
11. Did BH ever see Patterson after the filming? .................................................. 11

~~~~

6

1. When was BH first approached about suit wearing?
JULY OR AUGUST

BH — ― It was July or August of 1967. Gimlin said that
Roger was going to make a film, and they needed someone
to wear a suit. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 342
SEPTEMBER

Rob McConnell — ― When was the first time you ever heard
of Bigfoot? ‖
BH — ― Actually, it was in 1967 about September. … Roger
come up with the big scheme, you know, and he needed
some big hefty guy, a stout guy like me, to wear the
suit, so he contacted Bob, and asked if Bob would talk
to me. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Comment: Actually, the first time he ever heard of Bigfoot
in connection with Patterson was in May or June, when BH &
― t he boys ‖ were actors in Patterson‘s Bigfoot Documentary,
which was shot behind his house southwest of Tampico over
the course of three days. There‘s a photo of the actors on
horses in Long‘s book, on p. 39. Other pages where the
Documentary is discussed are 46, 71, 109-11 & 228-29.
~~~

1. Was BH concerned about possible illegality?
UNCONCERNED

Jeff Rense — ― You were aware then that you were
participating in what could have been — I don‘t know if
you knew how big— b ut certainly a fraud. ‖
BH — ― It didn‘t, you know, bother me at the time. I
didn‘t care what they done with the film they made.
Just so I got my thousand bucks. ‖
— J eff Rense radio show interview, March 1, 2004
BH — ― It [wearing the suit] didn‘t matter to me. I was
twenty-six years old. I didn‘t give a damn about
anything. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 344

7

CONCERNED

BH — ― I went up to Roger‘s place, which is about 14
miles above our place here, and he asked me if I would
wear the suit, and I said, ‗OK, as long as nothing‘s
illegal I‘ll do it for you.‘ ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Comment — Given BH‘s ― I didn‘t care ‖ attitude expressed in box
1, he would not likely have inserted the ― not-if-it‘sillegal ‖ proviso described in box 2. In other words, it‘s
more likely that he‘s changed his story than just added a
detail, because it‘s incongruous. But, even if the latter is
all it was, adding-on still amounts to suspicious
― e mbroidery ‖ — e specially because it‘s image-polishing
embroidery.
~~~

1. Did BH agree to wear the suit before, or while at, Tampico?
2. How many meetings were there at Tampico?
3. How many suit try-ons were there?
BH has contradicted himself on all three questions:
1 He‘s said he agreed to wear the suit before he met
Patterson in Tampico; but he‘s also said he didn‘t agree
until he got there.
2 He‘s said the first meeting at Tampico involved only a
meeting of the minds; but he‘s also said it included a
suit try-on as well.
3 He‘s said he tried-on the suit once; but he‘s also said
twice.
1. AGREED TO WEAR BEFORE TAMPICO MEETING
2 MEETINGS
1 TRY-ON

BH — ― I never really talked to Roger. The first time I
had sat down with him was at Tampico. … He wasn‘t
trying to sell me on the thing. ‖
Long — ― Because you had already agreed to wear the
suit? ‖
He [BH] nodded affirmatively.
BH — ― It was to seal the deal. He wanted to make sure I
would do it, and I wouldn‘t tell anybody…. I promised
him. … Shortly after that they had the suit done. They
said I had to go up to the South Fork and try on the
suit and make sure it fit …. ‖
…………
8

[at the 2nd meeting:]
― F inally he said, ‗That‘s perfect, that‘s the way I
want it.‘ ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 343-44 & 346
Comment: No second try-on was described — it would have been
superfluous in light of BH‘s ― perfect ‖ — and five lines later
Long‘s book moves on to describing the preparations for the
meetup in Bluff Creek.
2. AGREED TO WEAR WHILE AT TAMPICO
2 OR 3 MEETINGS
2 TRY-ONS

Rob McConnell — ― Tell us how you met Roger Patterson. ‖
BH — ― Gimlin said they were going to make a movie of
this Bigfoot suit. He said they were going to sell it
to the movie people and make a lot of money. He asked
me to see Patterson, so I went to his place.
― H e said, ‘We‘ll give you $1000 to wear the suit — it
won‘t take over ten minutes.‘ So I agreed to do it. I
tried the suit on at his place a couple of times. ‖
[It‘s not specified if the first try-on occurred then
and there.]
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
Comment: Why has Heironimus added a second try-on? Maybe
because he (or one of his advisors) realized it would make a
more believable account if there had been a second fitting.
It‘s implausible that his suit fit tightly without it.
To repeat my comment under item #1, BH ― met ‖ Patterson months
earlier, in May or June, during three days filming his
― D ocumentary. ‖
3. AGREED TO WEAR WHILE AT TAMPICO
1 MEETING
1 TRY-ON

BH — ― I went up to Roger‘s place, which is about 14
miles above our place here, and he asked me if I would
wear the suit, and I said, ‗as long as nothing‘s
illegal I‘ll do it for you.‘ … [more chit-chat in the
same vein follows]
― S o I tried the suit on. He showed me how he wanted me
to walk. And I passed his inspection. He said, ‗that‘s
the way I want it— p erfect.‘ And so I went home. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007;
[Similarly, on the Jeff Rense show (March 1, 2004), BH
said he made the agreement at Tampico, not before.]

9

Comment: Seemingly the try-on mentioned in box 3 just above
occurred at the same meeting where he agreed to wear the suit.
But in Long‘s book, p. 346, he said that it happened at a
subsequent meeting (see the last paragraph of text-box 1, on
the previous page).
Incidentally, here‘s a little bit of embroidery (an added
detail not mentioned initially) about ― adjustments. ‖ It meets
his need for a more plausible story — one in which some
― f itting ‖ of the suit was done:
BH — ― And I agreed to try the suit on. And he done a
few adjustments there. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
~~~

1. What day did P&G leave?
2. How many days later did BH depart?
3. Where was the rendezvous to be?
BH has been all over the map on these three questions:
1 He first said P&G left Friday or Saturday; then he said
Sunday.
2 He first said they left four or five days before him;
then he said two days; then three days; finally it was
one or two weeks.
3 He first said the rendezvous was Willow Creek, then he
changed it to Weitchpec.
Note: I‘ve calculated the number of ― days later ‖ (after P&G‘s
departure) that BH departed as follows:
1 Saturday makes sense as the day BH‘s mom saw the suit,
because that was likely her shopping day, and because BH
would more likely have slept in on a Saturday than a
weekday.
2 Therefore he drove home on Friday.
3 Therefore he slept Thursday night in Eureka, which was
the day of the filming.
4 Therefore he drove down the day before, on Wednesday.
Wednesday would have been October 4. (Wednesday matches one of
the days BH gave as his departure (in the 3rd text box below).

10

P&G LEFT FRIDAY OR SATURDAY
(SO BH LEFT 4 OR 5 DAYS LATER, TO AGREE WITH A WEDNESDAY FILMING)
MEETUP AT WILLOW CREEK

BH — ― They told me how to get there. ‗Go to … Willow
Creek.‘ I think Roger and Bob left on a Friday or
Saturday. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 347
[day P&G left was not specified — MONDAY IMPLIED]
BH LEFT 2 DAYS LATER
MEETUP AT WEITCHPEC

BH — ― They picked up a horse of mine and told me to
come down in a couple days later and … to meet me at a
gas station outside of town, in the little town
[indistinct] Weitchpec. ‖
— J eff Rense radio show interview, March 1, 2004
P&G LEFT SUNDAY
(SO BH LEFT 3 DAYS LATER)
MEETUP AT WEITCHPEC

BH — ― They [Patterson & Gimlin] wanted me to meet them
at Weitchpec, California on a Wednesday. They left on a
Sunday. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
-- [day P&G left was unspecified]
BH LEFT 7–14 DAYS LATER
-- [Meetup-place unspecified]

Interviewer Jim Pearson (reporting what BH told him) —
Heironimus loaned his horse Chico to Patterson and
Gimlin, who left for California a week or two before
Heironimus.
— ― C offee with Bigfoot, ‖ Marlene’s Upper Valley
Press, January & February 2007
~~~

1. How long was BH away from Yakima?
2. Was BH’s employer on strike during the filming?
Here‘s the summary of differences in BH‘s versions of these
events:
1 First he said his days-away were three; then he said five
days.
2 First he told Long he didn‘t miss work because his
employer was on strike; then he said he missed a week‘s
work (and pay).
11

THREE DAYS
-- [Work attendance unspecified — NO STRIKE MENTIONED]

Greg Long — Heironimus‘s part in the entire
― o peration ‖ had taken three days.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 350
[Days-gone unspecified]
STRIKE

Greg Long — ― Bob Heironimus was not working at the
time, Boise-Cascade was on strike; he had the time to
go down there. ‖
— v ideotaped speech to the Int‘l Bigfoot Society in
Portland, OR, March 27, 2004
[I think this was between 15 and 25 minutes into his
talk.]
After I pointed out on Bigfootforums that there had been no
strike at Boise-Cascade in 1967, BH changed his story:
FIVE DAYS
NO STRIKE

Interviewer Jim Pearson — Bob missed a week‘s work when
he went down to California.
— ― T he Unmaking of Bigfoot, ‖ Marlene’s Upper Valley
Press, Jan. & Feb. 2007
Interviewer Jim Pearson — Bob had been stiffed to the
tune of week‘s lost wages and a thousand bucks.
— ― B ob Goes Public, ‖ Marlene’s Upper Valley Press,
Jan. & Feb. 2007
~~~

1. Did BH ever see Patterson after the filming?
NO — DIDN‘T SEE LATER

Jeff Rense — Did they contact you after the film was
processed … ?
BH — No. I never saw Roger after that.
— J eff Rense radio interview, March 1, 2004
YES — SAW OCCASIONALLY

Tom Biscardi — Did you ever bother him [Patterson] or
keep pestering at him [for your $1000]?
BH — I never run into him very much.
— T om Biscardi radio-show, May 17, 2007

~~~~
12

Bluff Creek Contradictions
Contents
12. What was the mileage from the meet-up to Bluff Creek Road? ...................... 12
13. And from there how many miles to the campsite? .......................................... 12
14. Was the filmsite right by the roadside?............................................................ 13
15. Who put the film in the mailing envelope? ...................................................... 14
16. Who put the suit in the trunk? .......................................................................... 14
17. What were Patterson’s track-stompers made of? ............................................. 15
18. Was a next-day film-announcement planned? ................................................. 15
19. Did a next-day film-announcement occur? ...................................................... 16
20. Did BH sleep overnight in Eureka? ................................................................. 18

~~~~

1. What was the mileage from the meet-up to Bluff Creek Road?
2. And from there how many miles to the campsite?
Summary: first he said 3 + 4–5 (7.5); then 2–3 + 2 (4.5); then
5–10 + ― long ‖ (10-20).
3 MILES
THEN 4 OR 5 MILES

BH — ― We drove, oh, it seems like about three miles out
of town, and then we come to Bluff Creek Road and
turned to the right and went up into the mountains
there about, it seems to me like about four miles,
maybe — five miles. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 347–48
2 OR 3 MILES
THEN 2 MILES

Greg Long — He [BH] brought to the kitchen table a
crudely drawn map. … The map indicated he had traveled
two or three miles west on the main highway outside
Willow Creek; turned right — or north — onto the Bluff
Creek Road; then drove two miles up a hill.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 366

13

5 OR 10 MILES
THEN ? MILES (unspecified)

BH — ― We drove maybe five or ten miles up the highway.
I don‘t remember exactly. We turned right onto a gravel
road and pulled up this long hill.‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 404
~~~

1. Was the filmsite right by the roadside?
YES — BY ROADSIDE

BH — ― We took the horses and the suit up the road to
the place they had picked out for the filming. Got off
the horses. We looked around there to check to see if
anybody was around. Listened for any cars coming up the
road, and heard nothing. So we went and right there,
they put the suit on me. Told me to go across here this
dry creek bed .…‖
— J eff Rense radio interview, March 1, 2004
NO — OFF-ROAD

BH — ― And the next morning we … saddled up the horses.
I rode … up to this place, and it was off the road
quite a ways so nobody could see us — and had this place
picked out. And they helped me get in the suit again. ‖
— T om Biscardi radio interview, March 14, 2007
This
BFF,
from
hole

change is suspicious because previously I, and others on
had pointed out that Bluff Creek Road is hundreds of feet
the filmsite. So this change seems an attempt to patch a
in his story.

But even if it isn‘t, it‘s a change about a circumstance that
an actual participant would likely have remembered clearly.
(Or, if he didn‘t have a good recollection of it, he wouldn‘t
have definitively said ― right there ‖ (by the road) in one
description, but ― o ff the road quite a ways ‖ in another, as
though the incident was clear in his mind. Therefore — for
either or both these reasons — this is a ― major ‖ change.)
Incidentally, on p. 348 of Long‘s book BH drew a map showing
the filmsite in relation to the road and the campsite. For
some reason Long didn‘t see fit to include it in his book, nor
on his website, although it is a vital piece of evidence. It
would resolve such questions as, Was this site to the left or
right of the road? (A similar comment applies to BH‘s map of
his route from the meetup at the gas station to the filmsite,
on p. 366. Both maps should be ― p ut on the record‖ on Long‘s
website, NorthwestMysteries.)
14

~~~

1. Who put the film in the mailing envelope?
BH PUT THE FILM IN

BH — ― Well, he had an envelope there mailed to Yakima,
and he said, ‗Put the film in it, take this to Eureka,
California, the post office.‘ ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
PATTERSON PUT THE FILM IN

BH — ― Roger already had an envelope, a package, prearranged. All he done was shove the film in it, I took
it to Eureka and mailed it home.
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
~~~

1. Who put the suit in the trunk?
PATTERSON & GIMLIN PUT THE SUIT IN

Greg Long — Patterson and Gimlin … laid it [the suit] in
the trunk of the Buick.
[This had to have been based on what BH told him.]
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 350
BH PUT THE SUIT IN

BH — ― I put the suit in the back of the car, my car. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
Comment: On BigfootForums.com (BFF) I pointed out the
contradiction above, whereupon BH corrected himself the next
time he was interviewed:
PATTERSON & GIMLIN PUT THE SUIT IN

BH — ― … they put the suit in the car. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
~~~~

1. What were Patterson’s track-stompers made of?
STOMPERS WERE PLASTER

BH — ― They said in the meantime they were going to take
those plaster casts that Roger had and go back up and
make the tracks that they wanted.‖
— S eth Shostak interview, August 1, 2004
15

BH — ― So they took their plaster casts out and went
back and mashed ‗em down into there, you know, as I
was going to Eureka. … Roger had made those plaster
casts. There were two or three guys around here that
had those casts. One guy was named Prentis Beck. ‖
— T om Biscardi radio-show, May 17, 2007
BH — ― As far as the footprints go, after the film was
filmed, we headed back to the car and they went back
with the plaster casts, mashed them down in the white
sand where I was walking through this creek bed. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
STOMPERS‘ COMPOSITION UNKNOWN

Henry May — ― Don‘t you know that plaster is very
delicate and that if you step on it, like if you‘re
like 150 or 200 pounds, that you could break those
casts? ‖
BH — ― Well, they didn‘t break. I didn‘t stand on them
myself. And I‘m sure they didn‘t break. ‖
Rob McConnell — ― Is it possible that the casts were
made of some other material, besides plaster? ‖
BH — ― There‘s been so many casts made, some of them
even wood at around this part of the country. I don‘t
know exactly what casts they had.‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
~~~~

1. Was a next-day film-announcement planned?
NO ANNOUNCEMENT PLANNED

BH — ― They said they had to go back and make tracks.
‗We have to go back and make them. We‘ll either do it
today, or tomorrow, and we‘re out of here and come
home.‘ ‖
………………….
Greg Long — ― Why do you think they asked you to take
the suit with you? ‖
BH — ― Well I don‘t know. I guess to get it home before
somebody saw it. I never thought about it. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 350
Comment: That statement, which BH attributed to Patterson &
Gimlin (P&G) right after the filming, implicitly ruled out any
film-announcement being in the offing. (They said they were
going home right after making the tracks.) Furthermore, BH
conspicuously failed to claim knowledge (the way he did later
on the Tom Biscardi show, below) of any supposed planned
16

announcement of P&G‘s. He would have told Long about it if
he‘d had such knowledge. It‘s a ― change of story ‖ of the most
suspicious sort.
YES — NEXT DAY ANNOUNCEMENT PLANNED

BH — ― They were going to go downtown there to the local
newspaper, media, or whatever and announce they had
seen the Bigfoot. So they put the suit in my car so
that nobody would see the suit in the back of the
truck. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
The most likely reason he changed his story is to patch up the
hole I poked in it in my Amazon review of Long‘s book, where I
pointed out (in item G) that it would have been senseless for
Patterson to have given the suit to BH unless a filmannouncement were imminent.
My Amazon review, ― A Tale of Two Suit, ‖ is at
http://www.amazon.com/review/R3BPK2J31N7EW9/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?
ie=UTF8&ASIN=1591021391&nodeID=&tag=&linkCode=
~~~

1. Did a next-day film-announcement occur?
NO NEXT DAY ANNOUNCEMENT
(THE FILMING WAS MUCH EARLIER THAN OCT. 20)

Greg Long — Bob Heironimus … told me that he drove to
the Bluff Creek area in either September or October
1967. … However, if Heironimus saw the Bigfoot Jamboree
banner stretched across the highway upon his entrance
into Happy Camp around the time of the Labor Day
weekend [in early September], then Patterson shot his
film long before October 20.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 420 & 421
NO NEXT DAY ANNOUNCEMENT
(THE FILMING WAS MUCH EARLIER THAN OCT. 20)

BH — ― And it was hot, you know, around the first
October, and I was sweating …. And after he got through
filming … there was a big hole there, and I jumped down
that hole.
‗Cuz it was first of October, which would be hunting
season, in that part of the woods, and all the time
walking down through there I was worried about somebody
shooting me. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007

17

YES — NEXT DAY ANNOUNCEMENT
(THE FILMING OCCURRED ONLY ONE DAY EARLIER)

BH — ― The reason I brought the suit home in the trunk
of the car is because, after they went back and made
the tracks, they headed for town to announce that they
had filmed the Bigfoot…. They didn‘t want anybody
seeing that — maybe taking a chance on having somebody
see it. So I brought it home in the trunk of the car. ‖
Rob McConnell — ― So you mean they announced that they
had filmed Bigfoot before the film was developed? ‖
BH — ― Uh, yes. ‖
Rob McConnell — ― Huh! Interesting. And did it catch on
right away? Did the press gobble the entire story?‖
BH — ― Oh yeah, yeah. They ate that right up. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Comment: Patterson‘s announcement to the Eureka Times-Standard
didn‘t occur until October 20, as its Oct. 21 story explicitly
stated. So
It‘s not possible for BH to credibly revise his story to
include an immediate announcement, because his ― September or
October ‖ phrase (above) forecloses it. Once he allowed a
September filming date as a possibility, he implied that there
had been a lengthy gap between the filming and the
announcement. Given that lengthy gap, his ― or October ‖ phrase
implied a date only in the month‘s first half. E.g., in the
― f irst or second week of October‖ (BH, Biscardi interview).
This fundamental story-change is very damaging to BH. It‘s
obviously self-serving, because his prior version was so
flagrantly implausible it had to be abandoned, for two
reasons:
1. Because Lyle Laverty‘s testimony, which I elicited and
posted, established that there‘d been no tracks at the
site before October 19.
2. Because Patterson wouldn‘t have given BH the suit unless
he planned an immediate announcement to the press.
I suspect the reason BH initially adopted the delayedannouncement version was to accommodate Long‘s need for there
to be a lengthy delay between the filming and the
announcement. (That‘s because Long figured the film couldn‘t
have been developed on Oct. 21.) My belief would be confirmed
if the taped version BH told reporter Jim Gosney in 1981 is
found to describe an immediate announcement.
PS: an October 19 filming clashes with BH‘s estimated 2–3 week
gap:

18

BH — ― The next day I drove home, and … two or three
weeks later, out came the movie, you know, on the
television, the film. ‖
— P AX cable TV show ― Lie Detector, ‖ May 17, 2005
That‘s because snippets from the film were broadcast
nationally in late October, according to Morris (p. 448). (And
also according to a Bigfooter, whose name I‘ve lost, who
posted a recollection of it to a Bigfoot e-mail list.) In
other words, the delay was ten days at most.
~~~

1. Did BH sleep overnight in Eureka?
YES — SLEPT OVERNIGHT

Greg Long — He stayed overnight in Eureka, and he
remembered renting a room in a small building whose
siding was made of logs. The next day he drove home to
Yakima.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 350
NO — DROVE HOME

BH — ― I took the film to Eureka, mailed the film, and
took off for home. … ‖
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
Interviewer Jim Pearson (reporting what BH told him) —
Bob started for home, stopping in Eureka to mail the
unprocessed 8mm [sic] film to Yakima. He drove straight
through, parked his mother‘s Buick, and went to bed.
— ― C offee with Bigfoot, ‖ Marlene’s Upper Valley
Press, January 2007
Comment: On BigfootForums.com I pointed out the contradiction
above, whereupon BH corrected himself in his next interview:
YES — SLEPT OVERNIGHT

BH — ― I took it to Eureka and mailed it, stayed
overnight there.‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
Comment: It‘s hard to justify this story-change as an innocent
mixup, because — a mong other things— i f he‘d slept in Eureka,
he‘d have driven home in daylight three-quarters of the way.
If he‘d driven straight home from Eureka, he‘d have driven
home in darkness three-quarters of the way. That difference
would have left an impression in his memory and made it hard
to forget what time he left.

19

(The above assumes a 3PM start from Eureka, based on a noon
departure from the filmsite. BH estimated the filming occurred
between 11 & noon, in his first XZone interview, December 7,
2006.)
************

Confidentiality & Confession-Related Contradictions
Contents
21. Did BH promise Patterson absolute secrecy? .................................................. 19
22. Did BH go to the Idle Hour bar? ...................................................................... 20
23. Did he implicitly “reveal” the hoax to his buddies? ........................................ 20
24. Did he explicitly “tell” anyone there about the hoax? ..................................... 20
25. How soon did BH’s buddies realize the suit’s purpose?.................................. 22
26. Did his mom, Opal, ask BH about the suit? ..................................................... 23
27. Who leaked the news about the suit? ............................................................... 23
28. If asked, “Was it you in the suit?”, when did BH first say “Yes”? .................. 24
29. Did BH talk to the media prior to seeing World’s Greatest Hoaxes in 1999?. 25
30. Did BH “come forward” with money in mind? ............................................... 26
31. Does BH have scruples now about hoaxing film-viewers? ............................. 27
32. Is BH willing to take another lie detector test? ................................................ 28

~~~~

1. Did BH promise Patterson absolute secrecy?
YES — ABSOLUTE SECRECY PROMISED

BH — ― [Patterson said,] ‗Don‘t reveal this to anybody.
This is top secret.‘ … He wanted to make sure I would
do it, and I wouldn‘t tell anybody, either then or
after the film was made. I promised him. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 343

20

NO — BH MERELY PROMISED HE WOULDN‘T TELL THE MEDIA

BH — ― I‗d promised them [P&G] I would not tell the
media or the news or the television or any of these
people. ‖
— S eth Shostak‘s ― S keptical Sunday ‖ Internet radio
show, August 1, 2004; a similar statement was made in
the Jeff Rense interview on March 1, 2004
Comment: His second, revised version of what he promised
Patterson made it retroactively OK for him to have displayed
the suit to his buddies and to have told Hammermeister.
~~~

1. Did BH go to the Idle Hour bar?
2. Did he implicitly “reveal” the hoax to his buddies?
3. Did he explicitly “tell” anyone there about the hoax?
NO BAR / NO SHOW / NO TELL
(BH DIDN‘T GO TO THE BAR, SO HE COULD REVEAL NOTHING)

BH — ― I mailed the film, I stayed there [in Eureka]
overnight, I started back the next morning, I got
home — 14 hours or whatever it was later — and I kind of
went in the house and went to sleep. ‖
— J eff Rense radio interview, March 1, 2004
YES — BAR / ? / ?
(BUT DIDN‘T REMEMBER REVEALING THE SUIT)

Long — ― Do you remember talking to the guys at the Idle
Hour Tavern? ‖
BH — ― I just don‘t remember. ‖ He shook his head. ― I
just don‘t remember. ‖ He was genuinely puzzled.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 405 (see also pp. 370-71)
Comment: There‘s a good reason he didn‘t tell Long that he‘d
shown off the suit the night he returned: because then Long
would have asked the supposed witnesses if that was when and
where they saw it, and they‘d have denied it. They‘d have
said, as Hammermeister told me, that they‘d seen it years
later. (Provided Long interviewed them without BH present,
which he failed to do with Hammermeister.) After Long was off
his case, his current version emerged:

21

YES — BAR / YES — SHOW / NO TELL
(BH DELIBERATELY REVEALED THE SUIT,
BUT TOLD NO ONE ITS PURPOSE)

BH — ― The next day I drove home, and uh, I went to the
local watering hole where all us guys hung out. And ...
uh, I lifted the trunk up and said, uh, take a look at
this. I didn‘t tell them what it was ... I said just
look at this and do not forget what this looks like. ‖
— L ie Detector TV show, May 17, 2005
BH — I promised him I wouldn‘t tell anybody. I didn‘t
tell anybody it was a Bigfoot suit.
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
Comment: I believe the reason he said ‖ I didn‘t tell them
what it was ‖ was to mesh with his claim to Long that he
didn‘t remember talking about the suit in the bar. That nondenial denial deceived Long implicitly by failing to answer
what Long was really asking — Did you let the cat out of the
bag? Long couldn‘t have known to specifically ask if BH had
silently given his buddies the bit of knowledge they needed to
make the connection on their own. So BH didn‘t come clean;
instead, he responded only the question‘s literal meaning,
dancing around the point of the inquiry. This failure to
correct an interrogator‘s misperception is deliberately
misleading, and therefore counts as lying. It contradicts his
supporters‘ claim that he‘s ― made a full confession ‖ and
― h as nothing to hide. ‖
YES — BAR / YES — SHOW / YES — TELL
(BH DELIBERATELY REVEALED THE SUIT,
AND TOLD HAMMERMEISTER ITS PURPOSE)

BH — (paraphrased) ― I showed Hammermeister the suit the
night I returned.‖
— p ersonal communication to Roger Knights, April 11,
2006
But he told Hammermeister what the suit was for when he showed
it to him. Here are Hammermeister‘s statements from Long‘s
book:
Hammermeister — ― He told me he did it, and he didn‘t
want it spread around for awhile. … he had the suit and
he trusted his friends, and he showed us ... and there
was still supposed to be payola on this thing, and he
didn‘t have it. ‖
— The Making of Bigfoot, p. 398
BH — (quoted by Hammermeister) ― That‘s what I wore when
we went down and did our thing. ‖
— The Making of Bigfoot, p. 397

22

BH — (paraphrased) ― Although Hammermeister recently
told you that the suit show-off event occurred at least
a year after I returned from Bluff Creek, his
recollection was faulty. He‘s just admitted that to
me. ‖
— p ersonal communication to Roger Knights, April 11,
2006
Comment: BH has managed to get his friend to change his story;
or his friend has spontaneously realized his faux pas and
changed it on his own. I‘m not surprised, because it would be
fatal to BH‘s fable if it were to come out that BH had been
showing it off around town for years, after he‘d told Long
that Patterson had retrieved the suit two days after the
filming.
But in doing so he‘s jumped out of the frying pan and into the
soup. I.e., he‘s contradicted his repeated assertions that he
― t old ‖ no one at the bar about the suit. And he‘s provoked my
riposte: Will Hammermeister take a lie detector test at my
expense? I‘ll also give him $200 for his time. This offer
extends to any other of my suit-witnesses whom BH has induced
to recant, as well as to his nephew John Miller, a supportive
but ― very bashful ‖ suit witness. (Contact Randy Ruegsegger at
509-248-1100 / RandyRuegsegger@Yahoo.com / 413 N. 2nd St. /
Yakima, WA 98901. RR was recommended by BH‘s retired
examiner, Jim McCormick.)
NO — BAR / NO SHOW / NO TELL
(BH DIDN‘T GO TO THE BAR, SO HE COULD REVEAL NOTHING)

Jim Pearson — Bob, a twenty-six-year-old bachelor who
lived with his mother, drove straight home in her car,
parked it and went to sleep.
― T he Unmaking of Bigfoot, ‖ an interview of BH in
January and February 2007 issues of Marlene’s Upper
Valley Press
Comment: Now we‘re back to square one.
~~~

1. How soon did BH’s buddies realize the suit’s purpose?
2–3 WEEKS LATER

BH — ― Well, two or three weeks later, out came the
movie, you know, on the television, the film. They
said, ‗Ah ha! That‘s what you were doing.‘ ‖
— L ie Detector TV show, May 17, 2005

23

AT ONCE

BH — “ I said, ― Take a look at this. … Do not
forget what this looks like. Well, right away, they
knew right then, what I‘d been doing. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
~~~

1. Did his mom, Opal, ask BH about the suit?
DIDN‘T ASK

Long — "Opal estimated she found the suit at 10 AM the
following day. ... Bob woke up later that morning or
afternoon, but Opal did not confront him. ... The
following morning ... Opal or Bob discovered that the
suit wasn't in the [car's] trunk. But neither of them
ever brought up the issue of why the suit had been in
the trunk, or why or how it disappeared."
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 366
ASKED

Reporter — His mother, Opal, found the gorilla suit in
the trunk of her Buick the next day.
BH — ― It really scared her at first. She wanted to know
what was going on and I said, ‗You'll figure it out.' '
She saw the film on television and knew immediately."
— ― B igfoot†Hoax Goes in Halls of Hooey, ‖ Leah Ward,
Yakima Herald-Republic, October 7, 2004
One day as he and his mother watched TV, the Bigfoot
film clip came on. Opal looked at her son and said,
― T hat‘s the costume that was in my car trunk, wasn‘t
it? ‖ Her son refused to answer.
— J im Pearson, ― The Unmaking of Bigfoot, ‖ one part of
a 3-part interview series of BH in the January and
February 2007 issues of Marlene’s Upper Valley Press
~~~

1. Who leaked the news about the suit?
BH‘S RELATIVES LEAKED

Long — ― Who did you tell your story to first? ‖
BH — ― My family, and then probably my wife‘s family.
After my mom saw the suit, and it leaked out [from her]
that it was in the back of the car, well, most people
around here did know it. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 356
24

Comment: The above implied that news leaked out because his
aunt, nephew, and mom spread the word about an ape-suit in his
trunk, in the wake of Patterson‘s announcement. That way BH
would have been innocent of letting the cat out of the bag at
the bar. That was what he wanted readers of Long‘s book to
believe, because he was claiming at that point that he
― d idn‘t remember‖ revealing it there.
But in the quote below he changed his story so that the leak
occurred via his deliberate boasting to his Idle Hour buddies.
He had to do this to accommodate the numerous people who‘ve
seen him show off the suit. But he had to wait until Long was
off the case — or at least after his book had been published —
before he could make his concession — his modified limited
hangout — to the facts.
BH‘S BARROOM BUDDIES LEAKED

BH — ― There was probably fifty to a hundred people that
knew, when the first time they saw that film, that it
was me. … Because six people [in the bar] saw the suit,
and it leaked out [from them] after that. ‖
— T om Biscardi Internet radio interview, March 14, 2007
~~~~

1. If asked, “Was it you in the suit?”, when did BH first say “Yes”?
ADMITTED IN 1969 OR 1971

BH — ― After about four years I decided everybody knew
that it was me anyway out where we lived out there.
They would say, ‗Was it really you?‘ … And I‘d say,
‗Yes, it was.‘ I just let the cat out of the bag. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, December 7, 2006
Tom Biscardi — Why didn‘t you come forward a lot sooner?
BH — I did, actually. About a year and a half … I got to
where I didn‘t give a damn, you know? And I finally
said, ― Yes, it was me. ‖
— T om Biscardi Internet radio interview, March 14, 2007
ADMITTED IN 1999

BH — ― Well, after I saw that television show called The
World’s Greatest Hoaxes, I decided then it was time to
let people know that that was a hoax. A year and a half
after we made the film, I never got paid, and I was
waiting around to get paid. And I decided then, too,
that if anybody asked me, ‗Was it really you in the
suit,‘ I didn‘t deny it, and I didn‘t say Yes or No.
I‘d given my word I wouldn‘t say anything about it.‖
— T om Biscardi Internet radio interview, March 14, 2007
25

Comment: Here‘s a fair rephrasing of that statement: “ Until
World’s Greatest Hoaxes was aired (in December 1998) I didn’t
ever admit publicly — i.e., to inquiring strangers — that I’d been
in the suit. It was a matter of principle. ” But in that same
interview, and in an earlier one (first box), he flatly
contradicted his statement that ― I didn‘t say yes or no. ‖
BH has often faced an awkward question: ― It‘s been a number of
years since Roger passed away, and any promise to him should have
been over by then. Since you didn‘t get paid, why wait until just
now? ‖ (That question was in fact posed by call-in listeners to
his two interviews.) He had a choice of two possible answers:
1 One reply was to stand on principle: I was bound by my
promise of silence to Roger.
2 The other reply was to deny that he kept quiet: Well,
actually I did fess up, but nobody outside my neighborhood
was paying attention.
Both responses are tempting. But they‘re mutually exclusive: he
must chose one and avoid the other. But BH succumbed to
temptation.
A deceptive defense of BH‘s statement could be offered: That he
initially adopted a No Comment policy, but gave it up after four
years and just didn‘t spell it out in fine detail in his Tom
Biscardi interview. Indeed, this is the only defense that could
be offered.
But that is just a polite way of saying that he chose to conceal
an awkward fact — i.e., be strategically economical with the
truth — in order to duck a tough question.
~~~~

1. Did BH talk to the media prior to seeing World’s Greatest Hoaxes in
1999?
DIDN‘T TALK TO MEDIA BEFORE 1999

BH — ― I‗d promised them I would not tell the media or
the news or the television or any of these people.‖
— S eth Shostak‘s ― S keptical Sunday ‖ Internet radio
show, August 1, 2004
BH — ― I kept this quiet for 35 years from the media,
from the television people. Everybody around here knew
it, but it was no big deal. ‖
— X zone interview, August 6, 2007

26

DID TALK TO MEDIA BEFORE 1999

Greg Long — Bob Heironimus opened up to a newspaper
reporter [Jim Gosney] who befriended him and told him
his story many times, starting in 1981.
— i n ― Q & A — The Making of Bigfoot, ‖ item #13, online
at http://.www.rense.com/general51/q.htm

~~~~

1. Did BH “come forward” with money in mind?
YES — SOUGHT MONEY FOR HIS YARN

The man [who was in the suit] wanted help in
negotiating a deal for the rights to his story.
— D avid Wasson, ― B igfoot Unzipped, ‖ Yakima HeraldRepublic, Jan. 30, 1999, quoting a press release from
BH‘s lawyer, Barry Woodard of Zillah, WA
The Zillah lawyer's office has been inundated with
calls from media outlets …. ‗We're just sort of waiting
for the dust to settle,‘ he said, explaining he and his
client are evaluating offers.
— D avid Wasson, ― B igfoot believers say film no fake, ‖
Yakima Herald-Republic, February 4, 1999
BH [To Gimlin] — ― I t‘s time I made some money out of
this thing. I‘m blowing the whistle. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 340
Greg Long — On October 24, 1999, I called Heironimus. …
― H ey, it‘s been nine months [since his attorney‘s
press release on Jan. 30, 1999] and nothing‘s come out.
… Why hasn‘t anyone bought your story, Bob? ‖
……………….
BH — ― Well, we're trying, ‖ he said in a sing-song
voice. ― I‘m not going to give it away. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 313
Greg Long — Through the spring and summer of 2000 … I
thought often of Heironimus‘s bitter hold out, as he
tried to milk a few last dollars from a dead man‘s
scam.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 314
BH — "I was never paid
said, adding, "Sure I
that after 36 years I
— ― M an admits:

a dime for that, no sir," he
want to make some money. I feel
should get some of it."
I was 'Bigfoot,' ‖ Richard Leiby,
Washington Post, March 7, 2004
27

"Is Bob H. gaining financially from his 'confession'?"
Greg Long — ― He is not. If there is a Bigfoot TV
special, Bob Heironimus should be paid for something. ‖
— G reg Long‘s Reply to John Green, on Long‘s site
― A nd then, shortly after the show [WGH] was on

[which was broadcast on December 28, 1998] … I get
a phone call — f rom a lawyer … who called me up and
said … ‗I represent the guy who was in the suit,
and it wasn‘t the guy you pointed to. … And he‘d be

more than willing to go on television if we could
strike the right deal.‘ ‖
— Bob Kiviat (producer of World’s Greatest Hoaxes),
on the Jeff Rense radio-show interview, March 1, 2004
NO — BH CAME FORWARD SELFLESSLY, WITHOUT MONEY IN MIND

Tom Biscardi — ― W hat do you have to gain, financially,
in this whole thing after all these years? ‖
BH — ― Nothing. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
Rob McConnell — ― Once again Bob I just want to say that
you have never had anything to personally gain from
coming out and telling the truth, besides being an
honest man. ‖
BH — ― Right. Just being honest. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Rob McConnell — ― Number two, you do not have anything
to personally gain from telling the truth except to be
an honest person.‖
BH — ― That‘s true. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
~~~~

1. Does BH have scruples now about hoaxing film-viewers?
NO SCRUPLES ABOUT HOAXING

Rob McConnell — If you had known after 35 years the film
would be taken so seriously by so many, would you have
done it?
BH — Yes, I would have, and I also would have demanded
my money or I would have spilled the beans or told the
media a month later.
— X zone radio interview, December 7, 2006

28

YES — TROUBLED BY HOAXING

Rob McConnell — If you were to do it all over again,
would you?
BH — Yah, I‘d do it again, for the simple reason is, it
wasn‘t against the law to do that. But: if I knew what
was going to become of it, well I wouldn‘t do it again,
no.
— X zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
~~~~

1. Is BH willing to take another lie detector test?
YES — BRING ‗EM ON

Greg Long — He [BH] has said many times that he is
willing to take many lie detector exams since he isn‘t
lying.
— ― C hallenge to John Green ‖ , 2nd section, ― John
Green‘s statements as Recorded on the Jeff Rense Show,
March 14, 2004 ‖ , item 15, Rebuttal, online at
http://www.northwestmysteries.com/makingofbigfoot/critics_johngreen.htm
NO — TWO TESTS ARE SUFFICIENT

But when a lie detector examiner I‘d contacted, Randy
Ruegsegger, called BH in May 2006 and asked if he‘d be willing
to take a free conventional lie detector exam, BH declined,
saying that he thought the two exams he‘d already taken were
sufficient.
*****************

Suit-Related Contradictions
Contents
33. Was it easy to walk in the costume? ................................................................ 29
34. What extra material was glued onto the suit? .................................................. 29
35. How big was the gap behind the eye-holes? .................................................... 30
36. How high were the boots inside the suit? ........................................................ 30
37. Were the Bigfoot’s feet made of slippers? ....................................................... 31
38. Was BH barefoot or shod inside the rubber boots? ......................................... 31
39. Was there padding in the suit? ......................................................................... 32
29

40. Were there any metal parts in the suit? ............................................................ 33
41. Was the suit split around the waist or up the back? ......................................... 33
42. Was the suit removed from the trunk by BH’s relatives? ................................ 34
43. Was Patterson’s suit-retrieval in Yakima surreptitious or not? ....................... 36

~~~

1. Was it easy to walk in the costume?
WALKING WAS EASY

Long — "Did you feel comfortable and natural walking in
the suit?"
BH — "Oh, yeah, it was easy, it was simple, yeah."
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 346
WALKING WASN‘T EASY

BH — "I practiced the†Bigfoot†walk exactly the way Roger
wanted it three times. It wasn't easy," he said.
— ― B igfoot†Hoax Goes in Halls of Hooey, ‖ Leah Beth
Ward,
Yakima Herald-Republic, October 7, 2004
~~~

1. What extra material was glued onto the suit?
OLD FUR COAT

BH — ― Roger told my brother Howard he made the whole
thing out of horsehide. Roger had skinned a red horse &
attached or glued fur from an old fur coat onto the
horsehide skin. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 345
HORSEHIDE

BH — ― Now, he told my brother, Howard, that he skinned
an old horse that died. [Indistinct] had a horse up
there that kicked the bucket. And he took some of that
hide and put it on that suit. Well, I think that was
what I was smelling, when I told everybody that the
suit stunk. I‘m pretty sure that was the horsehide.
Probably half rotten when he‘d skinned it. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
30

Comment: But it would make no sense to add horsehide patches
to a Morris suit, from Patterson‘s point of view. It would
give the suit a patchwork look. Horsehair is coarse, straight,
and stiff, so it would clash with the fine, fluffy Dynel hairs
on Morris‘s suit. Only from BH‘s point of view would such an
addition serve a purpose: to rescue his claim that the suit
stank. Without such add-ons, there‘d be no reason for a
Morris-made fabric suit with synthetic hairs to stink.
~~~~

1. How big was the gap behind the eye-holes?
2‖

Interviewer Jim Pearson — ― Bob was peering through two
slits a couple inches in front of his eyes. ‖
— ― C offee with Bigfoot, ‖ an interview of BH in a
January 2007 issue of Marlene’s Upper Valley Press
1.5 ‖

BH — ― There was an inch to an inch-and-a-half between
my eye and the cutouts in the mask.‘
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 355
1‖

BH — ― ‘They [the ― s lits ‖ ] were about this far from my
eyes.‘ He measured off an inch in front of his eyes. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 346
.25 ‖ to .5 ‖

BH — ― I had about a quarter or a half-inch of space in
between the mask and my entire face. ‖
[ ― entire ‖ was a bit slurred over— R K]
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
Comment: In that last quote, BH was describing the distance
between his lips and the mouth of the mask. He was trying to
minimize the distance on the Tom Biscardi show, to account for
the fact that Patty‘s lips move — t hat is, he had a motive to
― c hange his story. ‖ But, by saying ― entire face,‖ he
implied the eyes as well, in contradiction to his earlier
statements.
~~~

31

1. How high were the boots inside the suit?
WAIST-HIGH

BH — ― I … slipped my legs into the legs of the suit,
which felt like they were hip boots or wading boots …
that go up to your waist. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 344
KNEE-HIGH

BH — ― Those were irrigation
like irrigators wear, up to
the calves stick out pretty
— X Zone radio

boots, you know, kind of
about the knees. That‘s why
good there. ‖
interview, December 7, 2006

Comment: On BigfootForums.com I pointed out the contradiction
above, whereupon BH corrected himself in his next interview:
HIP-HIGH

BH — ― I had some kind of wading boots on, like hip
boots…. ‖
BH — ― The waders came clear up to my hips. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
~~~

1. Were the Bigfoot’s feet made of slippers?
YES — SLIPPERS

BH — ― I think the feet were made of old house slippers
you used to see around that looked like a big foot with
toes on them. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 344
NO SLIPPERS

BH — ― There were no slippers. ‖
— J eff Rense radio-show interview, March 1, 2004
~~~~

1. Was BH barefoot or shod inside the rubber boots?
BAREFOOT

BH — ― I sat down on a log and took my boots off and
slipped my legs into the legs of the suit. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 344 [re the try-on in
Tampico]

32

Interviewer Keith Olbermann — ― Were there bare feet
inside the costume or what was it?‖
BH — ― I was walking in my stocking feet inside my
costume. ‖
— C ountdown, an MSNBC TV show, March 22, 2004
SHOD

Caller — ― Mr. Heironimus, were you barefoot or wearing
shoes in the costume? ‖
BH — ― I had shoes on. ‖
— X zone radio interview, August 23, 2007
~~~

1. Was there padding in the suit?
NO PADDING (Implicit)

Long‘s book devotes three and a half full pages to BH‘s
description of the suit (pp. 344–46 & 355), and Long
repeatedly interviewed him four times about it. (Initially,
and then on January 23, 29, and 31 of 2001 — see p. 354.) None
of Long‘s printed questions asked about padding. Yet it‘s
inconceivable that he didn‘t ask BH about it. Long didn‘t
skimp on probing this matter; he stated that he focused on
trying to get all the detail he could out of BH (p. 354).
If BH had answered Yes to ― Was there padding? ‖ Long would
have printed that response. So the omission of a positive
response implies that the answer was No. Even if Long hadn‘t
asked, BH would have volunteered the detail, if it were a
fact.
In addition, BH initially said (below) that ― no belt ‖ was
used, which is inconsistent with pillows being ― strapped in. ‖
(See the 2nd text box.)
NO BELT OR HARNESS

Keith Olbermann — ― W ere you wearing a belt or a harness
of some sort to keep this costume in place? ‖
BH — ― No, there was no belt. ‖
— C ountdown, an MSNBC TV show, March 22, 2004
PADDING AND STRAPS WERE PRESENT

Morris — ― To create that illusion [of a butt crack],
Roger Patterson put two pillows in the rear end of the
suit. … I know that because I talked to Bob about it,
and that‘s what we did when we re-created the film. And
absolutely — you can see what you think is the butt
crack, and that‘s the pillows in the back, that are
strapped in. ‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007
33

Rob McConnell — ― Did you have to have stuffing
inside? ‖
BH — ― Oh yes, there was football helmets, pads, and an
old football helmet for the head, and the legs had
rubber boots in the legs for the big calves, and
padding in the rear end there. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
~~~

1. Were there any metal parts in the suit?
NO METAL PARTS

Long — ― Do you remember seeing any clasps, any metal
parts? ‖
BH — ― No. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 344–45
ONE METAL PART

Caller Sean Fokker — ― So he‘s saying he wore the Philip
Morris suit. ‖
BH — ― Yes, I did. ………. It had a zipper …. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Long — The zipper, a heavy-duty type used in the 1950s
and 1960s on the tops of convertible cars, was sewed on
the back of the suit.
[By ― a powerful sewing machine ‖ at ― a tent-andawning store. ‖ ]
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 450
~~~

1. Was the suit split around the waist or up the back?
AROUND THE WAIST

Long — ― Describe the suit to me. ‖
BH — ― It was made of three parts. It had the legs. It
had a corset or middle piece between the neck and
waist. And it had a head. ‖
………………………………..
Long — ― You put your feet inside big rubber boots that
went to your waist? ‖
BH — ― Yeah. All I can say is it felt like rubber boots.
… They helped me stand up. Roger and Bob slipped the
torso part down over my head and shoulders. I raised my
34

arms up. I kind of wiggled into it. … It was kind of
like putting on a T-shirt. ‖
……………………..
Long — ― How did the bottom portion fit around your
waist? ‖
BH — ― I guess [guess?!] there was a kind of draw
string. ‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, pp. 344–45
BH — ― They kind of helped me up and put the top on‖
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 349
Long — Regarding the ― Bigfoot‘s ‖ legs, Heironimus
repeated what he had said before, that they came to his
waist….
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 355
UP THE BACK

Caller Sean Fokker — ― So he‘s saying he wore the Philip
Morris suit. ‖
BH — ― Yes, I did. ………. It had a zipper going up and
down the back. ‖
— X Zone radio interview, August 6, 2007
Comment — Morris made a ― union suit ‖ that had a step-in back
with a metal-zippered opening (p. 449). Unlike the suit that
BH initially described, it had no ― t orso part, ‖ no T-shirtlike ― top, ‖ no ― m iddle piece, ‖ no ― draw string, ‖ and no
(separate) ― legs‖ that ― came to the waist. ‖ Morris‘s torso
and legs were a single unit, as in a romper suit.
GENERAL COMMENT: It‘s no good to say that BH was in and out of
the suit within ten minutes so he might not have noticed its
details. (See Long, p. 355.) According to BH‘s story, he was
actually in and out of it once or twice more at Tampico, where
he was interested enough in its effects to be involved in
inserting a glass eye into it (pp. 402–04). That must have
given him time to observe it laid out on the ground. And he
handled the suit both when he put it in his trunk leaving
Bluff Creek, and when he opened the trunk for Patterson later
on. (It wasn‘t in its sack on either occasion.) He‘d have paid
enough attention to have observed a good deal — it wasn‘t a
boring, routine item like a box of beans a warehouseman was
putting on a shelf.
~~~~

1. Was the suit removed from the trunk by BH’s relatives?

35

NOT REMOVED BY BH‘S RELATIVES

After Opal, BH‘s mom, discovered the suit in her trunk
(p. 363), Long asked her:
Long — What did you do next?
Opal — I didn‘t do anything. I shut the trunk. …
………….
― I ‘ve got something to show you,‖ she said to Willa
Smith [her sister-in-law] when she visited Opal that
afternoon. When Opal opened the trunk, Willa jumped
back in surprise.
Long — Did you tell her what it was?
Opal — Yeah, I said, ― I don‘t know what. It‘s a suit. I
don‘t know where it‘s come from. ‖
Willa picked up the head and put it on.
Long — That must have seemed kind of funny to you, her
wearing the head.
Opal — Oh, yeah! I wouldn‘t have put it on myself, but
she did. We were laughing a little bit, because she was
clowning out with it, you know.
Long — What happened next?
Opal — We put it [the head] back in the trunk, closed
her up.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 364
During the interval when it was open BH‘s 8-year-old nephew John
Miller also examined the contents of the trunk. Here is his
entire description of his interaction with the suit:
Long — ― What do you remember? ‖
John Miller — ― I just remember they had the trunk open,
and I remember looking in there, and, ― What‘s that! ‖
and picking up and fooling with it. And I can remember
finding the head and, being a kid, I just put it right
on. It was hot. And it stunk. I can remember going up
to the front porch and looking in the front window to
see if somebody could see me. I was going to try to
scare somebody. ‖
He didn‘t remember Willa Smith putting the head on.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 365
First, the above implies that the whole suit was not removed from
the trunk, only the head. Second, because (I assume) BH and his
lawyer checked out the chapters of Long‘s book concerning BH
prior to publication, which included this chapter, he implicitly
36

endorsed the version above. Of course, he didn‘t have first-hand
knowledge of what they did, supposedly being asleep while this
was happening, but he endorsed the above as being what he‘d heard
from his relatives.
MAYBE REMOVED BY BH‘S RELATIVES

BH — ― My mother saw the suit, my nephew was there, and
one of my aunts, which is deceased now, was there. They
got the suit out— a fter they startled umm [indistinct]
quite a bit — they got the suit out, tried — uh, the head
of the suit out, and was looking at it. And that‘s
when my aunt tried the head of it on, and my
nephew. All of them tried the head of the suit on.‖
— J eff Rense radio show, March 1, 2004
BH — ― And my nephew tried the suit on — uh, the head of
the suit on. ‖
— T om Biscardi radio show interview, 3/17/07
Comment: According to my theory of the case, BH had an ape-suit
in his possession for a long time and displayed it from time to
time, for instance to Garry Record. But, as described by Garry,
it had no resemblance to Patty. If this is the suit his relatives
saw, it would be awkward for BH if they saw the entire suit,
because then it would be suspicious if they failed to describe
it.
However, apparently these relatives did in fact examine the whole
suit, because when BH was asked a question about it his initial,
unguarded response was to acknowledge that fact, then take it
back, as above.
However, when pressed about it, he took back his take-back:
YES — WAS REMOVED BY BH‘S RELATIVES

Jeff Rense — ― You said that your niece and your aunt,
your mom got the suit out and were playing around with
it? ‖
BH — ― Yes, uh-huh. ‖
— J eff Rense radio show, March 1, 2004
Comment: My interpretation of his tap-dancing above is that when
he‘s forced to give a straight answer, he is afraid to flat-out
deny that the suit was removed from the trunk, for fear that
Miller, if questioned, would contradict him. That‘s how it looks
to me, from the hemming and hawing preceding the concession
above.
~~~~

37

1. Was Patterson’s suit-retrieval in Yakima surreptitious or not?
SURREPTITIOUS RETRIEVAL
(BH DID NOT OBSERVE THE SUIT‘S RETRIEVAL)

Greg Long — Later, at night, Patterson and Gimlin,
unseen, removed the suit from the trunk.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 351
Greg Long — That evening Patterson and Gimlin returned
Chico. With the car keys in the trunk lock or ignition,
they opened the trunk & removed the suit. The following
morning, Opal and Bob saw Chico in the pasture. Opal or
Bob discovered that the suit wasn‘t in the trunk.
— T he Making of Bigfoot, p. 366
RETRIEVAL WAS IN PLAIN VIEW

Jeff Rense — ― And the suit was picked up out of the
trunk of your car later on by Patterson? ‖
BH — ― Yes. When they brought my horse back they took
the suit out of the trunk of the car. ‖
……………..
Jeff Rense — ― All right. So what did they say to you?
Job well done? Did they say anything like — they weren‘t
doing high-fives back then I know— ―
BH — ― Well, they were picking their belts the way it
turned out. The walk, you know, the way it was, the— ―
— J eff Rense radio interview, March 1, 2004
BH — ― The last time I saw it was in the trunk of the
car. They brought the horse back, they took the suit
out, and that‘s the last I saw it.‖
— T om Biscardi-show interview, March 14, 2007;
(A similar remark was made on the Lie Detector show of
May 27, 2005 & the Xzone show of August 6, 2007.)
Comment: The business of Patterson gaining access because Opal
(his mom) accidentally left the car unlocked with the keys in
the ignition (p. 365 of Long‘s book) — a version which
Heironimus and his lawyer must have OK‘d when they reviewed
the manuscript for errors — becomes awkward to explain in light
of this later version.
It seems to me that the sole reason for the first version,
which implausibly required P&G to return after dark to remove
their suit from the car — hoping the keys had been left in it
to open the trunk— w as to accommodate Opal‘s remembrance that
P&G returned the horse but left without taking the suit (p.
385). That would be an accurate recollection, because P&G
hadn‘t used the suit in Bluff Creek and would have tossed it
back at BH.
(They couldn‘t retrieve the suit while she was watching
because — another implausibility — t hey had supposedly removed
38

it from its sack before handing it over for shipping.) If BH
hadn‘t gone along with Opal‘s version, a glaring contradiction
would have been presented to Long. But later, when that
awkward situation had passed, BH wanted to tell his radio
audience a tale that wouldn‘t arouse their incredulity.
More importantly, two years after talking to Long (which was
in 2002), it might have occurred to BH that he should revise
his story and claim that he encountered Patterson right after
the film arrived, so he could say he handed over the postal
insurance receipt at that point. He might have realized that
someone might ask what happened to the receipt. (I did that
myself in item K of my Amazon review of Long‘s book.) He
couldn‘t say he threw it away, because he said he wanted
evidence, such as suit-witnesses, that he‘d been in the suit.
So he almost had to create a story-version in which the
receipt could have been handed over.
Two days after the filming Patterson was in a position to
demand its return. (Two days after the filming was too soon
for BH to get suspicious about non-payment, and his residence
with the receipt in it was right there, so BH couldn‘t have
stalled for time.)
********************
As Sherlock Holmes would say, from these facts a
certain inference seems undeniable.
— R obert Anton Wilson

Blundering Bob’s Bodacious Bloopers: A Summary
Items are chronological under each
heading
Yellow highlighting marks major items.
Indentation or typeface = multi-part
query.

Answer 1

Answer 2

Answer 3

Answer 4

YAKIMA EVENTS
July or
Aug.

September

NO

YES

Before

While
there

While
there

4

When was BH approached about suitwearing?
Was BH concerned about possible
illegality?
Did BH agree to wear the suit before he went to
Tampico, or while he was there?
How many meetings were there in Tampico?

2

2 or 3

1

5

How many suit try-ons were there?

1
Fri. or
Sat.

2

1

--

Sunday

--

4 or 5

2

3

7 to 14

Willow
Creek

Weitchpec

Weitchpec

--

3

5

5

--

Y (per

(NO)-lost a week‘s
pay

1
2
3

What day did P&G leave?

6
7
8
9
1

depart?

How many days later did BH

Where was the rendezvous to be
in CA?
How many days was BH away from Yakima?
Was BH’s employer on strike while filming?
0

39

Long)

1

Did BH ever
1 see Patterson after the
filming?

NO

YES

BLUFF CREEK EVENTS
1
1
1

How many2 miles from meet-up to BC Road?

3

2 or 3

5 or 10

How many3 miles from the BC Road to camp?

4 or 5

2

--

YES

NO

Heironimus

Patterson

Patterson

Heironimus

Plaster

Plaster

Was a next-day film-announcement
planned? 8

NO

YES

Did a next-day film-announcement
9
occur?

NO

NO

YES

Did BH sleep
overnight in Eureka?
0

YES

NO

NO

YES

Was the filmsite
right alongside the
4
road?

1
Who put the
5 film in the envelope?
1
Who put the
6 suit in the car?
1

1

1

What were Roger‘s track-stompers made
7
of?

Heironimu
s

Patterso
n

Plaster

doesn‘t
know

2

CONFIDENTIALITY & CONFESSION-RELATED EVENTS
2

Did BH promise Patterson absolute
secrecy? 1

YES

NO

NO

YES

YES

YES

3
Did he “reveal”
the hoax to his buddies?

(NO)

No memory

YES

YES

4
Did he “tell”
any buddy about the hoax?

(NO)

(NO)

NO

YES

2
Did BH 2go to the Idle Hour bar?
2

2

2

2
2
2

When did BH‘s buddies get the suit‘s
purpose? 5

2 or 3 weeks later

Did his mom,
Opal, ask BH about the
6
suit?

NO

YES

7 the news about the suit?
Who leaked

mom &
aunt

buddies

If asked, ― Was it really you in the
8
suit ‖ ? when
did BH first say ― Yes ‖ ?

1969 or
‗71

1999

Did he talk
9 to the media before 1999?

NO

YES

2

40

At once

3
3
3

Did BH come forward with money in
0
mind?

YES

NO

Does BH have
scruples now about
1
hoaxing?

NO

YES

Is BH willing
to take another lie
2
detector test?

YES

NO

SUIT-RELATED ITEMS
3
Was it easy
3 to walk in the costume?
3

3

3

3

3

3

4

YES

NO

Fur Coat

Horsehide

Were the Bigfoot feet made of
slippers? 5

YES

NO

How big was
6 the gap behind the eyeholes?

2‖

1.5 ‖

1‖

Waist-high

Knee-high

Hip-high

Barefoot

Shod

NEITHER

NO Belt

NO

YES

What extra material was glued onto the
4
suit?

How high were the boots inside the
7
suit?
Was BH barefoot or shod in those
8
boots?
Was there padding or a harness in the
9
suit?
Were there any metal parts in the
0
suit?

BOTH

.25–.5 ‖

(padding &
strap)

(a heavy
zipper)

4
Where was 1 the suit split?
4

4

Around the waist

Did relatives remove the suit from the
2
trunk?

NO

MAYBE

Was Patterson‘s Yakima suit-retrieval
3
seen?

NO

YES

41

Up the back

YES






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